LIBRARY 


| M.Knoedler&Co. 
14 East 57th St. 
New York | 


4 


, 


heme A 


, 


< 


te 


pared 
Fog OH 4 4 4 4 

Bh’ te i i ” 
Baa i - 

me ay: 

J Pa 
: vA 
a's 


‘il 
a ey is 

coum Mae 

ON FREE PUBLIC VIEW 


AT THE AMERICAN ART GALLERIES 


MADISON SQUARE SOUTH, NEW YORK. 


BEGINNING SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28ru, 1918 


FROM 9 A. M, UNTIL 6 P. M. 


THE PRIVATE COLLECTION 


OF 


AMERICAN PAINTINGS 


FORMED BY THE LATE 


WILLIAM H. PAYNE 


TO BE SOLD AT UNRESTRICTED PUBLIC SALE 


IN THE GRAND BALLROOM OF 
THE PLAZA 


: FIFTH AVENUE, 58TH TO 59TH STREET 


MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 6ru, 1919 
: BEGINNING AT 8.15 O’CLOCK 


ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE 


OF 


THE PRIVATE COLLECTION OF 


AMERICAN PAINTINGS 


FORMED BY THE LATE 


WILLIAM H. PAYNE 


TO BE SOLD AT UNRESTRICTED PUBLIC SALE 


IN THE GRAN® BALLROOM 
OF THE PLAZA 


ON THE EVENING HEREIN MENTIONED 


THE SALE WILL BE CONDUCTED BY 


MR. THOMAS E. KIRBY 
AND HIS ASSISTANTS, MR. OTTO BERNET AND MR. H. H. PARKE 


THE AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, MANAGERS 


6 EAST TWENTY-THIRD ‘STREET 
MADISON SQUARE SOUTH 
NEW YORK 
1919 


THE AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION 
DESIGNS ITS CATALOGUES AND DIRECTS 
ALL DETAILS OF ILLUSTRATION 
TEXT AND TYPOGRAPHY 


A COLLECTION OF AMERICAN 
PICTURES 


This collection, formed by an appreciative citizen 
who made his selections and purchases chiefly during the 


’80’s, is made up wholly of the works of American art- 


ists, and with two or three exceptions the subjects 
treated are also altogether American. The collection 
represents both widely known and less well known 
painters, both among the living and of those who have 
passed on, the great majority of them Academicians or 
Associate Members of the National Academy of De- 
sign; and the membership of the former Society of 
American Artists, now merged with the Academy, 1s 
also represented. 

The collector, the late Wiliam H. Payne, a mer- 
chant of New York, bought not so much as a collector 
as for the decoration of his house and for his own delec- 
tation ; he did not seek comprehensiveness, nor to demon- 
strate a theory, but he acquired a harmonious assemblage 
of pictures, varied, and of worth. He began his collect- 
ing early in the ’80’s, visiting the studios as well as the 
exhibitions. He was a member of the Art Committee of 
the Union League Club, and in 1887 was its chairman. 
His collection has until now remained as he left it, in 
his home at 98 Park Avenue, the corner of Fortieth 


Street. The relatively small number of additions to it 


which are included in this sale have been chosen by his 
family since his death. 

Notable among the opportunities which the col- 
lection affords present day collectors are two fine and 
unusual Innesses, the “Summer Storm” and “Sunset 
near St. Peter’s, Rome.’ Alexander H. Wyant, 
Dwight W. Tryon and J. Francis Murphy appear in 
early examples which will come almost as a surprise to 
confirmed visitors to the exhibitions and sales galleries— 
and come with equal welcome; and there are no less 
than five Blakelocks (all purchased before there arose 
in the land a profitable industry in the production of 
“Blakelocks”). Some of Emil Carlsen’s fascinating 
early work is here, there is a La Farge from the Thomas 
B. Clarke collection of 1899, and among the few water 
colors are drawings by Winslow Homer and Edwin A. 
Abbey. 

Dana H. Carrort. 


New York, November, 1918. 


CONDITIONS OF SALE 


1. Any bid which is merely a nominal or fractional advance 
may be rejected by the auctioneer, if, in his judgment, such bid 
would be likely to affect the sale injuriously. 


2. The highest bidder shall be the buyer, and if any dispute 
arise between two or more bidders, the auctioneer shall either de- 


cide the same or put up for re-sale the lot so in dispute. 


3. Payment shall be made of all or such part of the pur- 
chase money as may be required, and the names and addresses of 
the purchasers shall be given immediately on the sale of every lot, 
in default of which the lot so purchased shall be immediately put 
up again and re-sold. 

Payment of that part of the eee money not made at 
the time of sale shall be made within ten days thereafter, in de- 
fault of which the undersigned may either continue to hold the 
lots at the risk of the purchaser and take such action as may be 
necessary for the enforcement of the sale, or may at public or 
private sale, and without other than this notice, re-sell the lots 
for the benefit of such purchaser, and the deficiency (if any) aris- 


ing from such re-sale shall be a charge against such purchaser. 


4. Delivery of any purchase will be made only upon pay- 
ment of the total amount due for all purchases at the sale. 

Deliveries will be made on sales days between the hours of 
9 A. M. and 1 P. M., and on other days—except holidays— 
between the hours of 9 A. M. and 5 P. M. 


Delivery of any purchase will be made only at the American 


Art Galleries, or other place of sale, as the case may be, and only 


on presenting the bill of purchase. 
Delivery may be made, at the discretion of the Association, 


of any purchase during the session of the sale at which it was sold. 


5. Shipping, boxing or wrapping of purchases is a business 
in which the Association is in no wise engaged, and will not be 
performed by the Association for purchasers. The Association 
will, however, afford to purchasers every facility for employing 
at current and reasonable rates carriers and packers; doing so, 
however, without any assumption of responsibility on its part 
for the acts and charges of the parties engaged for such service. 

6. Storage of any purchase shall be at the sole risk of the 
purchaser. Title passes upon the fall of the auctioneer’s hammer, 
and thereafter, while the Association will exercise due caution in 
caring for and delivering such purchase, it will not hold itself 
responsible if such purchase be lost, stolen, damaged or destroyed. 

Storage charges will be made upon all purchases not removed 


within ten days from the date of the sale thereof. 


7. Guarantee is not made either by the owner or the Asso- 
ciation of the correctness of the description, genuineness or au- 
thenticity of any lot, and no sale will be set aside on account of 
any incorrectness, error of cataloguing, or any imperfection not 
noted. Every lot is on public exhibition one or more days prior 
to its sale, after which it is sold “as is” and without recourse. 

The Association exercises great care to catalogue every lot 
correctly, and will give consideration to the opinion of any trust- 
worthy expert to the effect that any lot has been incorrectly cata- 
logued, and, in its judgment, may cither sell the lot as catalogued 
or make mention of the opinion of such expert, who thereby would 
become responsible for such damage as might result were his 


opinion without proper foundation. 


AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION, 
American Art Galleries, 


Madison Square South. 


SALE MONDAY EVENING 


JANUARY 6, 1919 


IN THE GRAND BALLROOM OF 
THE PLAZA 


FIFTH AVENUE, FIFTY-EIGHTH TO FIFTY-NINTH STREET 


BEGINNING AT 8.15 O’CLOCK 


WILLIAM MORGAN, AN.A. 
1826—1900 


1—--EHARLY HOURS 


7 
Height, 9 inches; width, 6 inches (1 Cots £ ‘ 


STANDING figure of a small girl in loose, short-sleeved 
white waist and reddish-brown skirt, facing the spec- 
tator, with arms raised and both hands supporting her 
thrown back head, in a yawn of reluctance. 


Signed at the lower left, W. Morean, 1879. 


V4 f i ‘ 
ae Lenny, Lenser 


: 5 : 19 Cromunys 


Jad 


S\ 


. 
an 


tov. KK 


Sg S WILLIAM H. BEARD, N.A. 
1825—1900 


2—“SOME SPORT” 
Height, 614 inches; length, 9Y inches 
A MONKEY garbed as a man in costume of yellow, red, 
green and brown, and wearing a blue cap, leans with 
elbow on a table holding bottles of refreshments, and 
puffs a glowing cigar. 
Signed at the lower left, W. H. Brarp. 


E. L. HENRY, N.A. 
1841— 
3—A STUDY OF BLACK AND TANS, 
NEAR WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 
Height, 6 mches; length, 9 inches 


On the stone steps of a garden walk bordered by green 
grass and jars of flowering plants, and shaded by thick 
trees, two black and tan dogs guard a gee = picka- 
ninny busy with a pair of scissors. 


Signed at the lower right, E. L. Henry. 
se 6, TAL“ 


WILLIAM HART, N.A. 
1823—1894 


: oh Z 
p Q-— 4 AUTUMN LANDSCAPE ot ag 


Height, 71 inches; length, 1114 inches 


7 


«AT left a mass of slender and bushy trees, fading-green, 
vellow and brilliant red, at the border of a stream; across 
the water cows In a meadow, and in the distance moun- | 
tain slopes full of color. 


Signed at the lower left, W. Harr. 


LOUIS MOELLER, N.A. 
1855— 


= o- 5—EXAMINATION 
Height, 10 inches; width, 8 inches ft. ) bev, Kin ty 


TurexE bearded men, two with wavy and tousled white 
locks and one with sparse dark hair, lean over a table 
in earnest discussion of an unbroken egg which one of 
them holds, their black clothing throwing egg and white 
table cover into strong relief, and their heads reflected 
in high lights against dark interior walls. 


Signed at the lower right, Louis MorLuer. 


ROBERT FREDERICK BLUM, N.A. 


Le. 
Dt hnk Aa. 1857—19038 


6—AMONG THE WILD FLOWERS 
Height, 914 inches; width, 5Y% imches 


STANDING figure of a tall and buxom lady in a shot-silk 
gown of emerald and gold, in a green meadow of tall 
grass and taller field flowers. She is bare headed and 
carries a fan and parasol. In the distance a village, with 


slender church spire. : 
Signed at the lower left, Buum, 1878. 


wg 


— 


| 
: 
: 


EDWIN A. ABBEY, N.A. 
1852—1911 


7—PEASANTRY 


Height, 12 inches; width, 734 inches 


Aw elderly man and woman converse on a bridge, while 
a boy and girl look over its stone barrier to the harbor 
beyond, all in characteristic peasant costumes largely 
of blue, the females in white caps. 


(Water Color) ado bet CY ke ve. 


CHARLES F. ULRICH, A.N.A. 
1858—1908 


8S—PORTRAIT HEAD 
Height, 8 inches; width, 6 inches 


A “Ho.erErIn HEAD”; head and shoulders of a woman of 
sober, thoughtful expression, the face in a strong but 
diffused light, relieved against a gray background by 
the black hood-like head covering which binds brows and 
ears. She wears a dark bluish waist, with black neck- 
band, and a large ornate brooch. 


4M, Signed at the upper right, Utricn. 


Shown at the Southern Exhibition, Louisville, Kentucky, 1884. 


ARTHUR QUARTLEY, N.A. 
1839—1886 


9I—MOONLIGHT MARINE 
Q 
Height, 121% inches; width, 9 inches Vi 
On the left a fishing boat with a red light in its bow ap- 
proaches the observer, standing off the point of a rocky 
coast. Two men are aboard, taking their calling lei- 
surely. Between boat and shore the light from a partly 


screened full moon plays upon a choppy sea. 


Signed at the lower left, A. QUARTLEY. 


RALPH ALBERT BLAKELOCK, N.A 


OVAr4 V Ler 70 | 


/\ Vad 
1847— vt i V | 


v 
10—IN THE SIERRA NEVADA MOUNTAINS 
Height, 81% inches; width, 61% inches 


TurovuGH an opening between thick-foliaged trees at 
the edge of a forest the spectator looks across a far 
stretch of country, indefinite in detail in the mellow light 
of an after-sunset glow. At the right, between the trees, 
is a considerable mound, and on a lesser mound at the 
left a squaw is seated, while a little beyond her an Indian 
man is standing. 


Signed at the lower right, R. A. BLAKELOCK. 


LOUIS MOELLER, N.A. 
1855— 


11—_SHORT MEASURE 
Height, 12 mches; width, 9 mches 


An old man deeply wrinkled, with strong features, gray 
hair and beard and rheumatic knuckles, seated at care- 
less ease in an armchair, holds aside his newspaper and 
gazes critically at a too nearly emptied glass. 


Signed at the upper left, Louis MoELLER. 


SW Tee 092 2 E 


FREDERICK W. FREER, A.N.A 
1849—1908 


12—-MEDITATION 


Height, 1334 inches; width, 10144 inches = / Pye Lt, 7 sg f 4 
Sxatep in the embrasure of a stained glass window a ‘ 
young woman in a fur trimmed gray dress gazes medi- 
tatively at a picture resting against a table at the left. 
Her face is toward the spectator and her lids droop. 
Her black velvet hat, poised well back over her warm 


brown hair, is relieved by a white bow at the side. 


Signed at the lower right, F. W. Freer, 1882. 


FRANK FOWLER, N.A. 
1852—1910 
13—LILLA 


Height, 131% inches; width, 10% inches 
Zh. 


usT portrait of a blue-eyed young woman with chest- 
nut hair, in black decolleté waist, to the right, with face 
turned full upon the observer. 


Signed at the lower left, Franx Fow er. 


JOHN F. KENSETT, N.A. 
1818—1872 


14—THE COMING STORM 
Height, 10 inches; length, 15 mches 


RapipLy gathering storm clouds have blotted out most 
of the light of the sky and darkened a broad stretch of 
country bordering the head of a lake, which appears in - 
the foreground. ‘The landscape is in autumn hues, and 
colorful reflections appear in the water. 


} ge Vics Signed at the lower left, J. F. K. 


JAMES CRAWFORD THOM 
1835—1898 


15—THE COMING OF AUTUMN : a 
nee) OC af) | 
Height, 14 inches; width, 10 inches T, fi i a, Aw aan 


A WOODLAND scene of birches and a sluggish stream, 
with a distant glimpse of blue sky; amid bordering | 
shrubbery in the foreground two wild ducks at rest. 


Signed at the lower right, J. C. THom. 


JOHN LA FARGEH, N.A. 
ore 1835—1910 


16—TIGER’S HEAD 
, ° ; : sg f 
Height, 121% inches; width, 91/2 mches Jatt /L- KL. UUAA 


Ture head and shoulder of a tiger, entering from the left; 
the head is turned slightly and the tiger looks forward 
out of the picture, toward the right, his features strongly 
characterized, the high lights and transparent shadow 
playing with warmth and effect on the rich coat. 


Signed at the upper left, La Farcr, 1862. 


From the Thomas B. Clarke Collection, New York, 1899. 


DAVID JOHNSON, N.A. 
lf 1827—1908 


0 17—ALONG THE RIVER 
“Ae / Height, 84 inches; length, 12 inches 


A PpLAciD pastoral stream is lost to view in the middle 
distance between winding banks bordered by detached 
trees. Cattle graze in neighboring fields, and a figure 
in a punt appears on the river amid reflections of the 
banks and of a summer sky. 


Signed at the lower right (in monogram), D. J., and on the 
back, Davin Jounson, 1883. 


: WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE, N.A. 
: 1849—1916 


QO 18—PARK LANDSCAPE y y, 


Height, 614 inches; length, 91 inches ola tla Ae 7 a 


Tue paved and winding walk of a park, shadowed im 
the foreground, curves in the middle distance about 
pedestaled urns of exotic plants and between bordering 
beds of brightly colored flowers, all in sunlight. In the 
background, dense foliage in varying notes of green. 


Signed at the lower right, Wm. M. Case. 


RALPH ALBERT BLAKELOCK, N.A. 


r 


1847— 


19-MOONLIGHT NO \Nv 


Height, 54% mches; length, 714 inches 


At the right two short trees, their dense leafage a 
rounded mass dark against the light of the full yellow 
moon, which is but little above the horizon across the 
center of the picture. The sky above the moon is dark, 
as is all the land below, including low brush at the left, 
beside a foreground pool which ripples as it reflects the 
moonlight. (Artist’s visiting card on back of frame.) 


seni 


Uy. 


oJ 


0 


4 


WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE, N.A. 


1849—1916 


20—REHPAIR DOCKS, GOWANUS BAY 


Height, 10 inches; length, 15 inches 


dgk : aa 
ay A HEAVY red sailboat with her mast out lies in gently 


rippling water, near a canal boat, and in dock and 
against bulkheads extending nearly across the back- 
ground are square-rigged ships and an old-time side- 
wheel steamer. 

Signed at the lower left, Wm. M. CHase. 


Shown at the Chicago Exposition, 1889. 


Shown at the American Art Association, New York. 


CARLETON WIGGINS, N.A. 


1848— 


21—_LANDSCAPE AND CATTLE 
AT GREZ, FRANCE 


yet Height, 12°4 inches; length, 16 inches 


Atv the left four pollarded willows on the bank of a 
stream, and in their shade a peasant woman standing, 
looking out at dun, red and black and white cows which 
have waded into the water to drink. In the distance a 
group of farm buildings and a grove. 


Signed at the lower left, CAanteEton Wicerns, 1888. 


92 IN THE KITCHEN 


CHARLES J. TAYLOR 
1855— 


fi) ” . 
Height, 17 inches; width, 14 inches KK. Slaw denn 


Aw aproned woman stands beside a stove, looking down 
upon a small boy who bends over a baked pudding 
which rests upon the open oven door. 


Signed at the lower right, Cuas. J. Taytor, N. Y., 1875. 


J. H. DOLPH, N.A. 
1835— 1903 


23—CAT AND KITTENS pf 
} 
Height, 121% inches; length, 181% inches “5? (\. 


THREE kittens rolling and playing about their reclining 
mother, all on the quilted seat of a sofa, against a back- 
ground of crimson drapery. 


Signed at the lower left, J. H. Doupnu. 


From the Thomas B. Clarke Collection, New York, 1899. 


ALFRED C. HOWLAND, N.A. — 
1828—1909 


() ~ 24—SATURDAY AFTERNOON 
Height, 12 inches; length, 16 inches 


9 rf f ; 
‘Ap, nse Ub ‘ ; . : 
Gig (Liv / On a low rustic bridge over a brook some school chil- 


dren and infants in care of their mother are watching a 
boy who is fishing. In the background a green hillside 
supports some scattered feathery trees, and two farm 
cottages intercept its skyline. A paster on the back 
gives the scene as near Williamstown, Massachusetts. 


Signed at the lower left, A. C. HowLanp. 


Exhibited at the Panama-Pacific Exhibition, San Francisco. 


H. SIDDONS MOWBRAY, N.A. 
1858— 


| ¢ 5 23—THE SISTERS 


Height, 12 inches; length, 14 inches ne | sh nau 


Two pretty young girls at their ease on a divan, one 
seated, one reclining, engage leisurely at chess. ‘Their 
brown hair falls over their shoulders and they are in 
flowery kimonos, one pink, the other white. 


i Signed at the lower right, H. Sippons Mowzray. 


THOMAS MORAN, N.A. 
1887— 


? 
(p Y 26—INQUIRING THE WAY 
i : Height, 101% inches; length, 14 inches 


L 
eS Oe CUMATA FOREST glade in sunshine and shadow, the trees in full 
summer foliage and the rich green prospect warmed by 
lichen-covered boulders bordering a brook. In the shad- 
ows a woman riding a white horse. A man and woman 
afoot approach her. 


Signed at the lower right, 'T. Moran, 1878. 


From the Thomas B. Clarke Collection exhibited at the Galleries 
of the American Art Association, 1884. 


q 


SS nie Se, nde” a8 1 


r= 


4 i 
| 
\ 
ie 
Hi 
: 
1 
it 
i 
| 
i 
| 
| 
i 
i } 
: j 
i | 
; } 
; i 
} 
} 
| 
| 
: | 
: 
} 


ae. 
Siaothyph apne 


a 


Ue ak, rf 


bong LANDSCAPE “big in little, 


ALEXANDER H. WYANT, N.A. 
1836—1892 


27—AN OLD FIELD 


Height, 1014 mches; length, 13 mches 


99 


with all of Nature on an 
autumn day expressed in small compass with simplicity 
and sureness of execution, and enduring charm. The 
middleground is occupied by a meadow that is still a lush 
green, broken by occasional patches of herbage in the 
sere, and it is bounded on the farther side by rough, 
bushless mounds whose surfaces show faint yellows and 
rich browns and fading greens. At its right border a 
single tree and a mass of shrubbery, presenting varied 
greens and yellow and a deep mahogany-brown. In 
the foreground a yellow-brown field of stubble; in it 
a solitary old woman in a white cap, walking slowly 

with a cane. 
Signed at the lower left, A. H. Wyant, 778. 


From the Thomas B. Clarke Collection exhibited at the Galleries 
of the American Art Association, 1884. 


Saabta ane RAD a x oe nae 


EEE — - — - —— 


as 


Bean A 


J. FRANCIS MURPHY, N.A. 
18538— 


283—AUTUMN 
(Water Color) 


Height, 13% inches; length, 18% inches 


“oe the right the edge of a grove of slender trees, some 
all but stripped of their leaves, others retaining foliage 
in yellow, red and brown, and in their shelter a large 
gray building. To left, wild land of meadow and brush 
threaded by a silvery brooklet. In the distance clumps 
of trees. 

Signed at the lower left, J. Francis Murpny. 


at 


Vv. 


<\ INSLOW HOMER, N.A. 
1886—1910 
: 10%  2%—d GLOUCESTER FISHERMAN a 
| ly ) (Water Color) | 
S . j ; a jus ney Height, 91% inches; length, 191 mches 


Wanpinc knee-deep in ruffled water far up a harbor, a 
young fisherman comes forward laden with a rolled up 
net. Behind him his dory is at anchor. The rim of his 
sou wester partly obscures his face, which is in profile to 
the left, and the rich blue of his shirt contrasts with the 
orange and deep brown notes of his oilskins. 


Signed at the lower right, Winstow Homer. 


— — eee 


hig 


a. 


HENRY PETERS GRAY, P.N.A. 


1819—1877 
) 0 “ —- 80—-OPH ELIA 
ie ft, : / Height, 15 inches; width, 12 inches 
“eae f| fe 8 Te the foreground the figure of the fair young daughter 


| of Polonius is floating on a winding stream, buoyed by 
; the billowing folds of her white gown; in one hand a 
wreath of brilliant flowers. Above her, weeping wil- 
lows arch the stream, and beneath their dark boughs 
the eye roams over wandering valleys and hillsides to 
a light horizon. 


Queen. There is a willow grows ascaunt the brook, . . . 
There on the pendent boughs her coronet weeds — 
Clambering to hang, an envious sliver broke; 
When down her weedy trophies, and herself, 
Fell in the weeping brook. Her clothes spread wide; 
And, mermaid-like, a while they bore her up: 


Till that the garments, heavy with their drink, 
Pull’d the poor wretch from her melodious lay, 


(Hamuer. Act IV; sc. VII.) 


FLORA L. TOWNER 


ConTEMPORARY 
of 31—_ROSES 
20 
| ie Ly .. ieee Height, 18 inches; width, 14 inches 


Rosts of delicate: pink, with a few of their leaves of 
soft grayish green branching from their stems, nod 
gracefully from a slender glass vase before a gray wall 
warmed by their reflections. 


Signed at the lower left, F. L. Towner, 1891. 


EASTMAN JOHNSON, N.A. 
1824—1906 


p “— 32—PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST 
7 Height, 1514 wmches; width, 12 inches ( iy, LL [Arrvih dy | 


SELF-PORTRAIT at three-quarters length. The painter 
is seated in a carved wood high-backed chair, facing the 
spectator and turned slightly toward the left. He wears 
a brown suit, and a flowing black dressing-gown with 
turned-back cuffs of turquoise-blue, and holds between 

his knees a bottle of wine which he regards with interest. 
Two tall slender glasses stand on a table at his elbow. 
His sober attire is warmed by the crimson upholstery 
of his chair seat, and above his head a partly set palette 
hangs against the wall. 


Signed at the lower right, E. Jounson, 1863. | 


Exhibited at the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences. 


WORDSWORTH THOMPSON, N.A. 
—1896 


| 7 0 ~  33—ARAB CAVALIERS 


/) Nt fi 
Height, 12 inches; length, 20 inches Wn ue Li rn (WA 


( 


Two warriors of the desert, in apparel of crimson and 
gold beneath the white burnoose, progress from the left 
on graceful Arabian steeds, one black and one sorrel, 
their dog running ahead of them, across a flat and bar- 
ren country with low mountains in the distance. 


Signed at the lower right, Worpswortu THompson, ’85. 


GEORGE H. SMILLIE, N.A. 


1840— . 
Lae, ) 
y e 34—APFTERNOON GLOW 
Height, 16 inches; length, 24 inches 
h 7 Oma Jim Ay the left the head of a pond, with a figure seen in a 
i ¢ red row-boat pulled up under a tree. On the right a 


road winding along the foot of a hill and past a white 
farmhouse, the landscape in the warm glow of a late 
summer afternoon, with fleecy clouds tinged with pink. 


Signed at the lower right, Gro. H. Smruuie, N.A. 


ioe Sw 
ke Z % MLE ALBERT. BEAKELOCK, N.A. 


\ V Ly x hy uty, Vi" VK Ae “e407 
35—THE FULB MOON 


fs L Height, 16 inches; length, 24 inches 


ee, IA A, Ai \AL—W- ey 


Tur full moon well above the horizon shines white in a 
greenish sky. Across the middleground a screen of trees 
extends, standing out in sharp silhouette, the light defin- 
ing leafage and branches in shadowy intricacy of detail. 
Nestling in the deeper shadow of the trees, near the 
center of the screen, a ridge-roofed cottage appears, with 
bold chimney and a single lighted window. 


Signed at. the lower left, R. A. BLAKELOCK. 


Ss 


DWIGHT W. TRYON, N.A. ‘ies 

| 1849— ‘| We y""\ 
( 7 36—THE CLOSE OF DAY = 

| Height, 14 wmnches; length, 20 inches ly ae 


- 


A sit of wild country without habitation, an open wood, 
is pictured at the hour when bits of cloud above the 
horizon are still aglow with sunset colors while the cres- 
cent moon, far at the left and little above their own al- 
titude, shines white in a greenish sky. The moon is seen 
above the top of a grayish copse, a dense tree turned a 
russet-brown stands near, and off to the right feathery 
trees light and slender rise amid clumps of bush and 
project above the distant blue-hilled skyline. In the 
middleground the low brush turns from green to brown 
and a deep red, and a pool in the foreground reflects the 
green of the sky, enriched by the warmth of a rosy cloud. 


Signed at the lower right, D. W. Tryon. 


a 


aj 


a 


a 


ASHER BROWN DURAND, P.N.A.. 
1796— 1886 


37—DEPARTURE OF COLUMBUS FROM 
THE HARBOR OF PALOS, 
ON HIS FIRST VOYAGE 
iw, UU y= Height, 14 inches; length, 20 inches 


\ 
FOLLOWING a winding road through meadows a long 


procession of horsemen proceeds down to a beach, off 
which are standing the Santa Maria, Nina and Pinta, 
in a ruffled sea. To left the shore line becomes moun- 
tainous. 


From the Harrison Collection, Philadelphia, 1912. 


LOUIS MOELLER, N.A. 
1855— 


38—_THE CHESS PLAYERS 
Height, 18 inches; length, 24 inches iw) é lw 


Two elderly men engage at a game, one smilingly self- 
complacent, his opponent earnestly studying his move, 
while a third grimly genial oldster looks on. They play 
in a room with many pictures and other decorations, all 
appearing in low tones in a softened light. 


Signed at the lower right, Louris MorLier. 


JAMES G. TYLER 
1855— 


vues 39—O’-9ER SUNKEN LEDGES 
d| Height, 131 naher length, 22 inches 


Tn UW. ly | fhe “+4TUumMULTUOUS waves roll and break in the white light of 
their own foam, as they heave over unseen rocks, and 
just beyond the breakers a ship, with topsails housed, 
bends in misty outline in a storm, while gulls and flying 
spindrift spot the grayness of storm and sky. 


Signed at the lower right, James G. TYLER. 


SEYMOUR JOSEPH GUY, N.A. 
| \U 1824—1910 


40—LANDSCAPE AT BOLTON 


) Height, 14 inches; length, 23 inches 


} ; 
Ma , K nn VL AAA 
ve danke Cee aOR and a cultivated field, trees green and 


golden, and outcropping purplish-gray rocks; and be- 
yond them, a silvery river which loses itself in a mountain 
vale. Inscribed at the lower right: Bolton, Sept. 20, ’64. 


BENJAMIN RUTHERFORD FITZ, S.A.A. 
1855—1891 


we 


} 

fac 41—PORTRAIT 
'~ 2 : 
| Height, 20 mches; width, 16 inches iy. / 9 boom | 
. 


Hap and shoulders of a mature young woman, figure ( 
slightly to the left and face turned forward, with the 

light striking broadly from the right beneath a broad- 

rimmed hat worn at an angle and adorned with plumes. 

: She wears a greenish-brown dress, and a fur cloak lined 

| with crimson. , 

Signed at the lower right, B. R. Firz. 


WILLIAM MERRITT CHASE, N.A. 


1849—1916 
| he _ 42-THE JAPANESE DOLL 
Height, 1914 mches; length, 24 inches fig / d, Wy * f 


A stitx life of rich but low-toned surfaces, embracing ( 
an opened picture book and before it a pear-shaped jar 

of dark greenish hue, into which has been thrust a Japan- 

ese doll dressed in a red kimono. 


Signed at the lower right, Wm. M. Cuase. 


| 


hea 


— pe i 


i 
i 
\ 
| 


FREDERIC E. CHURCH, N.A. 
1826—1900 


a Fa 
Z~]? 183—LANDSCAPE 
. Height, 18 inches; length, 26 inches 


A. WINDING river divides the foreground; on the left 

two women in red and blue stand on a sandy point from 
which a punt with passengers is departing, and on the 

right bank are two cows and a farmhouse, in shadow. 

| In the background, a valley and mountains in sunshine. 


Signed at the lower right, F. Cuurcu. 


CHARLES MELVILLE DEWEY, N.A. 
1851—- 


44—SALT MARSH IN SEPTEMBER 
Height, 16 inches; length, 24 inches J a p 


Fiat and marshy meadows reaching to a distant bay 
glow in the warm yellow-browns of autumn, relieved 
by patches of soft, fresh green, and are penetrated by 
a rambling inlet, along whose banks single-masted sail- 
boats are made fast. Near the foreground stands a 
small thatch-roofed building, and others are silhouetted 
in the distance against another inlet. 


Signed at the lower left, CoHartes MELVILLE DEWEY. 


Bees: 
1 


WILLIAM BLISS BAKER 
1859—1889 


45—WOOD INTERIOR 
(Water Color) 


MA Height, 23% mches; width, 151% mches 


BircHEs, pines and other trees stand in second growth 
in an open wood, their bases moss-covered, the wood 
carpeted with chips and bark amid patches of coarse 


orTass. ‘ , 
Signed at the lower right, WM. Buiss Baker. 


WILLIAM L. SONTAG, N.A. 
1822—1900 
46—VIEW OF THE MOUNTAINS 
NEAR PLYMOUTH, NEW HAMPSHIRE 
Height, 1534 inches; length, 231 inches 


Cross in the foreground a slope and the plain at its foot 
are in clear view, with pines and fallen trunks, gray 
boulders and some trees in autumn coloring. In the 
distance are green peaks and diversified valleys, in an 
envelopment of shifting mountain mists which yield 
glimpses of an azure sky. 


Signed at the lower left, W. L. Sontac, N.A. 


CHARLES HAROLD DAVIS, N.A. 
IS56—— 


4T—A GRAY DAY IN JUNE 


Height, 18 inches; length, 24 mches [ny 

A sILvERY gray brook crosses the foreground, bearing 
reflections of the flags that line its farther bank. In 
the background gray cottages and farm buildings of 
France cross the picture, with an intervening screen of 
tall poplars. In the middleground are grass and hay 
fields and a plowed strip; and a woman and a cow, stand- 
ing in a meadow, throw no shadows on the grass, under 
the soft light of the cloud-spread gray sky. 


Signed at the lower left, C. H. Davis, Panis, ’84. 


lA L x 


‘ 
CS) 


; f/ 
‘i Lt AL: LYtawiar, 
! 


eo | 


] 


7 


hus 


j 
| 


ROBERT SWAIN GIFFORD, N.A. 
1840—1905 


48—-POINT ISABEL, FLORIDA , 
TTA Height, 12 mches; length, 24 one 


Broap flat stretches of creamy-yellow sand, warmed by 
patches of yellow-brown and orange herbage, fill fore- 
ground and left middleground, where they meet the 
distant sea. A sail there glints a soft creamy-white, on 
a sunless day. In the right middleground, on slightly 
higher land, masses of vegetation rich in color. domi- 
nated by two short cabbage palms, and in the distance 
a point of woods. 


Signed at the lower left, R. Swan Grrrorp, ’84. 


DWIGHT W. TRYON, N.A. 
1849— 


49—FARM LANDS IN AUTUMN 


: (Water Color) 
| Height, 161% inches; length, 28 inches 


Ly. Uy. ea vo 


A ¥eEw pollarded trees break the horizon line at top of 
a hill, to the left, and beyond the crest on the right ap- 
pears the roof of a farmhouse. Sloping forward are 
fields in grass and under cultivation, divided by stone 
fences near which the bushes have turned yellow; in one 
a stubble fire smokes. 


Signed at the lower right, D. W. Tryon. 


FREDERICK A. BRIDGMAN, N.A. 
1847— 


/ {0 “ 50-—REPOSE 


f, ) 


/ 


¥ 


Height, 13 inches; length, 20 inches 


¢ YUL— 

hice figure of a handsome young woman of 
large proportions, reclining demi-nue, on a low stand— 
a model resting. She has thrown herself down with her 
head on her arm, which rests upon rose and gold cush- 
ions, and has drawn over her hips a creamy-white drap- 
ery, her face appearing in transparent shadow beneath 
a wealth of rich Titian hair. 


Signed at the lower right, F. A. Bripeman, 1881. 


CHARLES MELVILLE DEWEY, N.A. 
1851— 


5I—_SAPLINGS IN AUTUMN 
(Water Color) 


Height, 14 inches; length, 21 inches Bes 0, 
GrouPepD on the rolling surface of a hilly field, in the 
left middle distance, a number of saplings display deli- 
cate notes of yellow and rose. ‘To right, a farmhouse 


in a hollow. 


Signed at the lower right, CHartes MetvitLE Dewey. 


/ 


Ly daw re, 


d 


, 


= > ee eee 
= 


SEYMOUR JOSEPH GUY, N.A. 
1824—1910 


I | Ou | 
iit 3 cy) 52—LANDSCAPE 
; a 7 Aa é Height, 14 inches; length, 20 inches 


[Vg re mountai f low and flat 
/ : ,UE mountains are seen far across a low and flat green 
~ valley of the middle distance, the whole viewed over 
the slope of a rocky hillside in the foreground, which is 
dotted with pines and denser trees. 


M. F. H. DE HAAS, N.A. 


1852—1895 
If pe 583—_NHAR THE LIGHTHOUSE 
} | 7 Height, 14 inches; length, 21 inches 
LTlrayn. 7 Fhe Ly tA nC FS 


LEISURELY waves rolling in from the left break among 
russet boulders standing in foreground shallows. Be- 
yond a broad channel of blue water, where a sloop is 
sailing, a long and barren point of land in the back- 
ground is marked by a lighthouse and cottage. 


RHODA HOLMES NICHOLS 


CoNTEMPORARY 


yor 54 VENICE 
Height, 1324 inches; length, 22 inches : 


BrErorE a garden wall of a rich soft white just touched 
with patches of delicate color, two languid Venetians 
‘face the spectator, seated on the steps of a gondola sta- 
tion. Above the wall, vines and cypress trees rise in the 
brilliant Adriatic sunlight against an azure sky. 


Signed at the lower left, Roopa Hoimes Nicuots, 1884. 


‘ 
_ 
4} 
F 
z 
| 
3 
? 
i 
; 
$ 
ry 


FRANCIS D. MILLET, N.A. 
1846—1912 


ote 55—THH GREEK GLASS BOTTLE 
Pg : Height, 21 inches; width, 151% inches 
. > 


‘hs KABA AT HREE-QUARTER-LENGTH seated figure of a handsome 
young woman in profile to the left, holding up before her 
a pear-shaped perfume bottle of iridescent glass, which 
she protects with a silk gauze scarf embroidered in colors 
and gold. Her reddish-golden hair is bound in white 
and she wears a Grecian gown of pale rose and green. 
Background of rich plum color. 


Signed at the lower left, F. D. Minuet. 


5 


H sd 


[bo - 


CHARLES C. CURRAN, N.A. 


1861— 


56—GATHERING GOLDEN ROD 
Height, 2134 inches; width, 18 inches Ly 


A. BRIGHT faced young girl in white is seen in profile, 
gathering a bouquet of brilliant golden rod, whose re- 
flected light illumines her smiling features as she stands 
before the dark green background of a shadowed pine 


forest. 
Signed at the lower right, Cuaries C. Curran, 1911. 


roge 


WORTHINGTON WHITTREDGE, N.A. 
1820—1910 


57—-AUTUMN LANDSCAPE | 
Height, 144% inches; length, 214% inches 


“Dense trees at the edge of a forest, glowing in the rich 
reds and yellows of autumn, cross the picture in the 
middle distance, with bluish-green and dark reddish- 
brown mountains in the background, under a turquoise 
sky screened by gray clouds. At the foot of the richly » 
colored trees a shallow and rapid mountain stream 
curves into the foreground, about a low flat bank which 
a hunter is crossing accompanied by his two dogs. 


Signed at the lower right, W. WuHitTREDGE. 


ROBERT SWAIN. GIFFORD, N.A. 


1840—1905 


58—BROWN MEADOWS 
Height, 14 inches; length, 25 inches 


In a reach of rolling meadows rich in autumnal coloring, 
a single tree standing amongst a few bushes at the cen- 
ter of the picture presents a: mass of deep red foliage, 
beneath the gray and white clouds of a wind-swept tur- 
quoise sky. 


Signed at the lower right, R. Swarn Grrrorp. 


ASHER BROWN DURAND, P.N.A. 
1796—1886 


59—STUDY FROM NATURE 
IN THE CATSKILLS 


° - ° ) ) | p | 
Height, 18 inches; length, 24 inches Qetie Ps [rad 


Rocks bare and moss covered, gray and rich ahoomne 
brown, surround a small pool in an open space within 
a forest. At the left a gnarled and blasted tree is care- 
fully studied, with a slender one which has prematurely 
all but succumbed to nature bending over upon it from 
the right. Around the background are dense woods, 
green and in a mellow light. 


Signed at the lower left, A. B. Duranp, 1858. 


WILLIAM T. RICHARDS 
1833—1905 


60—SPRING TIDE 


| os 40 hal Height, 191% inches; length, 881 inches £6 


| 


: 
| 
| 


From open sea at the left the waves sweep easily in 
and spread themselves along a broad flat reach of sand 
bordered by beach grasses, above which ducks are in 
flight. Aloft, a windy sky of creamy and gray clouds, 
which deepen below to a band of dark gray, skirted 
at the horizon with the pink of sunset. 


Signed at the lower right, Wh. T. Ricuarps, 1875. 


A { A rte uv is 
( 


DWIGHT W. TRYON, N.A. 


& 1849— “ 


\ 
| 


~  81—WINTER SUNSET 


H eight, 16 inches; length, 24 inches 


0° 

(LL. enews _ A ROLLING meadow in the foreground, and hillside fields 
separated by stone fences to left and in the distance, 
lie under a thick covering of snow, through which occa- 
sional tufts of grass come up, showing green or brown. 
Far away, gray barns. In the middle distance on the 
right a clump of light gray leafless trees and dense 
brown bushes. Over the crest of the distant undulatory 
skyline a golden arc of the setting sun, and at the left 
the white new moon. 


Signed at the lower right, D. W. Tryon, 1885 
ee 


FREDERICK S. CHURCH, N.A. 
1842— 


Height, 191% inches; length, 38 inches rs | 


AN opalescent fantaisie in delicate color, picturing a 
handsome young seeress gazing at the head of a man, 
which she holds in her extended arms on a marble table, 
while the fumes of incense drift past it and toward 
her sensitive nostrils. ‘The head is darkened and is 
wrapped in a yellow scarf. The sibyl, seen only above 
the waist and a little more than in profile, toward the 
left, wears a drapery of pale emerald gauze. In the 
background the colorful trees of a land of visions. 


Signed at the lower left, F. S. Courcn, N. Y., ’85. 


Shown at the Chicago Exposition, 1890. 


ee ‘= 


y 


CARLETON WIGGINS, N.A. 
1848— 


68—COWS AND WILLOWS 


(Water Color) 


L/ pir. Height, 231 inches; length, 311% inches 


A rep and white cow standing, a black cow with a white 
face lymg down, and two brown cows are carefully 
studied in an autumn landscape dotted with pollard 
willows and seen under a gray and purplish haze. 


Signed at the lower right, CarLETon Wicerns, 1882-3. 


RALPH ALBERT BLAKELOCK, N.A. 


1847— bok 
64—LANDSCAPE \/ 
or / 
by. uy 


Height, 16 inches; length, 24 inches 


{ Le dwwiln, d y 


DeEracHeEp trees large and small, a single one near the 

foreground on the right and others farther off on the 
left, stand in silhouette against an evening sky over- 
spread by a warm and deep yellow-glow. The rolling 
landscape below is dark in shadow, brightened only by 
reflections of the glow on the surface of water at the 
edge of the foreground, on the left. Near the larger 
tree two figures may be made out in the dim light. 


Signed at the lower right, R. A. BuaKe.ock. 


J. FRA tus! ee iiry, N.A. 
ANY We“ iV 1858— 
—SUNSET v lig 
Height, 13 inches; length, 24 inches NA? a / 


ie Banks of cloud extending all across a faint greenish- 
blue sky are edged and flooded with flame hues from the 
just departed sun, and beneath them a stratum along 
the horizon reflects a brilliant golden-yellow. Both the 
flame and the gold reappear on the surface of a stream 
in the foreground, while the intervening landscape is 
dark and indefinite. To right of the water a low, dense 
and widely branching tree stands out in strong silhou- 
ette, and beyond it smoke is curling from a farmhouse 
chimney. 


\ 


Re} 
we 


{. GEORGE INNESS, N.A. 


\ 


\ en 1825—1894 
t ft) uj \ 


66—SUNSET NEAR ST. PETERS, ROME 


Height, 16 mches; length, 24 inches 


A Hot Italian sunset glows, a fiery red, along the hori- 
,iyzon, toward the left, viewed from a point on the Tiber 
/ near the Villa Borghese. Intervening, in the middle 
distance, is the great pile of St. Peter’s with dome rising 
against the burning glow, and the extensive buildings 
of the Vatican reaching back toward the right in semi- 
darkness. Before the buildings, trees and bushes dot the 
broad green bank leading down to the river, which 
crosses the foreground, and here, on the right, a long 
cargo boat is being poled by one man, another man hold- 
ing the tiller and watching a cooking-fire built on deck. 


Signed at the lower right, G. INNEss. 


aes 


ALFRED KAPPES, A.N.A. 
1850—1894 


67—“DAR’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME” 
Height, 36 inches; width, 29 inches 


' Reprere with green corn and watermelon—the table 
between them bears testimony—an aged negro couple 
are seated happily in a kitchen with a mantel stove in 
the background and a rag-carpet mat on the floor. He 
strums the banjo and she joins him in a drooning song. 


Signed at the lower right, Kapprs, 1882. 


SAMUEL COLMAN, N.A. 
1833— 


Ya 
974 -— 68 LAKE GEORGE 


4 5 ; | ; /f ? : / : rly 
Height, 22 inches; length, 30 inches (Up, nO ) AL os: | 
/ 


A GuLimpseE of the Horicon in the shadow of its moun’ | 
tamous banks, with islets in the distance showing i 
touches of autumn color; in the foreground an outcrop- | 

i 


a 


ping rock ledge with sparse vegetation catches a slant 
of sunshine, and drawn up at its edge is a boat in which 
a young couple are idling. 


Signed at the lower left, S. Corman. 


oe RRNA MER is Hs bi pone Sogn feta Ma hosted y 
\ fon : . 


| bax. ALEXANDER HARRISON, N.A. 
o os 1853— 
69—AT THE COAST 
Height, 223/, inches; length, 391 inches 


Ar left and right massive chalk cliffs, that on the right 
the taller and lying within its own gray shadow, which 
it outlines on the creamy surface of its humbler neigh- 
bor on the left. Between them a way to a ruffled blue 
sea, and in this sheltered passage two boys beside a 
boiling kettle; a comrade approaches them from the 


beach. 


— 


¢ : Y) 
a Se. ff pe 


Signed at the lower left, 'T. Atex. Harrison. 


EASTMAN JOHNSON, N.A. 
1824—1906 


70—THEH CAPITALIST 
Height, 27 inches; width, 22 mches 


FULL-LENGTH portrait of a gray-bearded man past mid- 
dle age, seated in a Windsor chair with his back against 
a gray wall and facing the spectator; at his right an 
open Colonial desk. He wears a green-blue suit, with 
the coat broadly open and disclosing a plum-colored 


waistcoat. 
Signed at the lower left, KE. Jounson, 1886. 


es rowed. 


~——. 


{si pried 


- ee rt peter taht bir 


ALFRED KAPPKES, A.N.A. 


1850—1894 
T1—HARD TIMES 


Height, 30 inches; width, 20 inches 


ro otAY, J 


A WHITE-HAIRED negro in shirt sleeves, and trousers 
patched in wonderful color, is seated in a backless 
wooden chair before a window ledge adorned with small 
jars of plants. With back to the light and facing the 
spectator, he pores laboriously over a spelling book. 


Signed at the lower right, Karrss. 


Ae at 
wor 


aja 


\ RALPH ALBERT BLAKELOCK, N.A. 
1847— 


72—_EVENING LANDSCAPE 
Height, 16 inches; length, 24 wmches 


Att the visible sky and a pond or stream near the fore- 
ground are bathed in the soft golden light of the glow 
that suffuses the atmosphere after a brilliant sunset, 
and the distant rolling landscape shares in the warm 
light flood. All else, the thick tall trees at right and 
left of the foreground, and brush and smaller trees be- 
side the stream, in the middle distance, stands forth deep 
in shadow or nebulous in silhouette against the mellow 
sky. 


LAL: w (hd o 


oe 


Signed at the lower left, R. A. BLaKELock. 


SEWN AS 
. SS AYE 


at a me (A eae 


GEORGE INNESS, N.A. 
18251894 


73—_SUMMER STORM 
Height, 17 inches; length, 254% inches 


ForMIDABLE thunder clouds, blue-gray and dark pur- 
plish, are borne swiftly in from the left, obscuring the 
white cloud masses which have been rolling lazily across 
a turquoise sky and lying low in the atmosphere of a 
humid day. Sunshine still gilds a ripened grain field 
of the middle distance, where men are hurrying with har- 
vest work, and brightens green meadows and tall bushes, 
across the center of the composition, while tall trees 
stand sombre in shadow beneath the approaching clouds. 
On the right, in the foreground a fisherman wades a 
shining silvery stream, and in the distance a white cot- 
tage is seen at the edge of a wood. 


Signed at the lower left, G. InnEss, 1874. 


~, 


\ 
Pa ly 


CHARLES HAROLD DAVIS, N.A. 
1856— 


74--LOW LAND MEADOWS 
Height, 28 inches; length, 45 inches 


Broan flat meadows characteristic of the Low Coun- 
tries spread from foreground to a far horizon on the 
right, and on the left are bordered by a range of low 
hills. In the middle distance cows graze in sunlight 
and shadow, a group of haystacks stands off at the 
right, and in the central foreground a pond occupies 


, 


a depression in the land. , 


Signed at the lower left, C. H. Davis, 1885. 


75—COMING INTO HARBOR, 


ARTHUR QUARTLEY, N.A. 
1839—1886 


LONG ISLAND 
Height, 26 inches; length, 44 inches / 4 ig ph 
SEVERAL sailing craft, fore-and-afters, are seen at the 
broad mouth of a harbor over whose ruffled waters the 
sea gulls are flying low. From the left a point of land 
puts out, and in the central distance a square-rigger 
with sails furled is being towed in by a smoking tug. 


Signed at the lower left, ARTHUR QUARTLEY. 


j 


/ i AhA] NK an htt 


L 


THOMAS ALLEN, A.N.A. 
1849— 


76—MAPLEHURST AT NOON 

/ | Height, 284 inches; length, 41% inches 
4) | by s 
, A BrRoAD hillside pasture on the right, flooded with sun- 
‘i shine, is divided by a low stone fence from a wooded 
field on the left whose wide-branching trees in the 
a foreground provide grateful shade for a herd of Jersey 
ig cattle, some of which show a mild interest in the spec- 
i tator. 


Signed at bottom, to right of center, Tuos. ALLEN, fe., 1879. 


Exhibited, National Academy of Design, 1876. 

Exhibited, Paris Salon, 1882. 

Exhibited, American Art Galleries, New York, 1884. 
From the Thomas B. Clarke Collection, New York, 1899. 


am 


“THOMAS COLE, N.A. 
1801—1848 


T7I— SEGEST A, SICILY 


Height, 32 mches; length, 48 inches 4 1), by. 


CLASSICAL ruins overgrown with greenery stand on the 
bank of a stream, to whose shore have come gaily clad 
Italian girls, one of whom beats her tambourine while 
a youth dances on the sand. 


Signed at the lower right, 'T. Coin, 1845. 


Shown at an Exhibition of Paintings of the late T. Cole, at 
the American Art Union, 497 Broadway, New York, 1848; 
No. 56, “Vale and Temple of Segesta, Sicily.” 


“Midway between Palermo and Segesta the broad slopes 
of an ample valley * * * In the depths a river, meandering 
among fragrant oleanders. On the left * * * a range of distant 
mountains, and on the right is a beautiful bay of the Mediter- 
ranean. Across the valley the mountains form a green amphi- 
theater and high in a remote part is seen the Temple of Se- 
gesta.”—F rom notes of the artist, made on a tour in Sicily. 


a ee eee ee ee 


.RTISTS REPRESENTED AND 


> 


LIST OF ARTISTS REPRESENTED AND 


THEIR WORKS 


ABBEY, Epwin A., N.A. 
Peasantry 


ALLEN, Tuomas, A.N.A. 
| Maplehurst at Noon 


BAKER, Wiurs1Am Biss 


Wood Interior 


BEARD, Wiutu1am H., N.A. 
“Some Sport” 


BLAKELOCK, Ratren Apert, N.A. 


In the Sierra Nevada Mountains 
Moonlight 

The Full Moon 

Landscape 

Evening Landscape 


BLUM, Ropert Frepericr, N.A. 
Among the Wild Flowers 


BRIDGMAN, Freperick A., N.A. 
Repose 


CHASE, Wii11am Merritt, N.A. 
Park Landscape 
Repair Docks, Gowanus Bay 
The Japanese Doll 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBER 


rf 


76 


6 


ee Oe ee ee A ee ON aes on 


PE ee he ee ee 


5 


| 
: 


CHURCH, Frenprric E., N.A. 
Landscape 


CHURCH, Frenrricx S., N.A. 
A Sibyl 


COLE, Tuomas, N.A. 
Segesta, Sicily 


COLMAN, SAMUEL, N.A. 
Lake George 


CURRAN, Cuartss C., N.A. 
Gathering Golden Rod 


DAVIS, Crartes Harorp, N.A.’ 
A Gray Day in June 
Lowland Meadows 


DEWEY, Cuwaritrs Mervinie, N.A. 
Salt Marsh in September 
Saplings in Autumn 


DOLPH, J. H., N.A. 
Cat and Kittens 


DURAND, Asuer Brown, P.N.A. 
Departure of Columbus from the Harbor 
of Palos, on his First Voyage 
Study from Nature in the Catskills 


FITZ, Bensamin Rutuerrorp, §.4.A. 
Portrait 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBER 


43 
: 
i 
68 
56 


AT 
74: 


44, 
51 


23 


37 
59 


41 


FOWLER, Frank, N.A. 
Lilla 


FREER, Frepericxk W., A.N.A. 
Meditation 


GIFFORD, Rosert Swain, N.A. 


Point Isabel, Florida 
Brown Meadows 


GRAY, Henry Peters, P.N.A. 
Ophelia 


Guy. SEYMOUR JosEPH, N.A. 
Landscape at Bolton 
Landscape 


HAAS, M. F. H. ve, N.A. 
Near the Lighthouse — 


HARRISON, Atexanover, N.A. 
At the Coast 


HART, Wiis, N.A. 


Autumn Landscape 


PoeNRY, EK. L., NA. 
A Study of Black and Tans, near Wil- 


mington, Delaware 


HOMER, Winstow, N.A. 


A Gloucester Fisherman 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBER 


13 
12 


48 
58 


30 


40 
a y4 


53 


69 


29 


HOWLAND, Aurrep C., N.A. 
Saturday Afternoon 


INNESS, Grorcr, N.A. 


Sunset near St. Peter’s, Rome 
Summer Storm 


JOHNSON, Davin, N.A. 
Along the River 


JOHNSON, Eastman, N.A. 


Portrait of the Artist 
The Capitalist 


KAPPES, Atrrep, 4A.N.A. 


“Dar’s No Place Like Home” 
Hard Times 


KENSETT, Jonn F., N.A. 
The Coming Storm 


LA LARGH, Joun, N.A. 
Tiger’s Head 


MILLET, Francis D., N.A. 
The Greek Glass Bottle 


MOELLER, Louts, N.A. 
Examination 
Short Measure 
The Chess Players 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBER 


24) 


66 
73 


17 


14 


16 


MORAN, THomas, N.A. 
Inquiring the Way 


MORGAN, Witusam, A.N.A. 
Karly Hours 


MOWBRAY, H. Sippons, N.A. 
The Sisters 


MURPHY, J. Francis, N.A. 
Autumn 
Sunset 


NICHOLS, Ruopa Hoitmes 


Venice 


QUARTLEY, Arruvr, N.A. 
Moonlight Marine 
Coming into Harbor, Long Island 


RICHARDS, Wiu1am T. 
Spring Tide 


SMILLIE, Grorce H., N.A. 


Afternoon Glow 


SONTAG, Wim L., N.A. 


View of the Mountains near Plymouth, 
New Hampshire 


AY LOR, Cuaries.J. 
In the Kitchen 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBER 


26 


25 


5A 


60 


34 


46 


22 


THOM, James CrawrorpD 
The Coming of Autumn 


THOMPSON, WorpswortnH, N.A. 
Arab Cavaliers 


TOWNER, Ftora L. 
Roses 


TRYON, Dwient W., N.A. 
The Close of Day 


Farm Lands in Autumn 
Winter Sunset 


TYLER, James G. 
O’er Sunken Ledges 


ULRICH, Cuartezs F., A.N.A. 
Portrait Head 


WYANT, ALEXANDER H., N.A. 
An Old Field 


WHITTREDGE, Wortruineton, N.A. 
Autumn Landscape 


WIGGINS, Carteton, N.A. 
Landscape and Cattle at Grez, France 
Cows and Willows 


CATALOGUE 
NUMBER 


15 


33 


31 


36 
49 
61 


39 


27 


57 


21 
63 


INTELLIGENT APPRAISALS 
FOR 
UNITED STATES AND STATE TAX 


INSURANCE AND OTHER PURPOSES 


THE AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION 


IS EXCEPTIONALLY WELL EQUIPPED 
TO FURNISH 


APPRAISEMENTS AND INVENTORIES 


OF 


ART PROPERTY, BOOKS, MANUSCRIPTS, JEWELS 
AND PERSONAL EFFECTS OF 
EVERY DESCRIPTION 


AT CHARGES COMMENSURATE 
WITH THE DUTIES INVOLVED 


THE AMERICAN ART ASSOCIATION 
MADISON SQUARE SOUTH 


NEW YORK 
TELEPHONE, 3346 GRAMERCY 


pi 
iq 
iW 
: 
} 
i 


- 


COMPOSITION, PRESSWORK 
AND BINDING BY 


3 3125 01663 0945 


. 
. 
ba 
i 
: » 
3 + " 
S : 
F ‘ 
1 
+ af 
_ sak 
. \ x 
< Z “ 4Y 
. 4 
$ hae « 
A : 3 F 
. * a x 
. Ro : i 


‘ 
za 
ae 


Serene 
Serene 


pre staty 
Tasted yas Ta tes 
SRS A BOY 2 
gohan 


aa) 
at 


eR NS 
mat 


ss 


Bey 


XAT 
Me iS 


